On December 5, 2025, AAP leader Raghav Chadha demanded the end of 10-minute delivery services provided by quick commerce firms. Speaking in the Rajya Sabha during Zero Hour, he called this practice "cruelty" towards gig workers. Chadha stressed that delivery workers are not robots but are fathers, husbands, brothers, and sons. He said customers expect food in 10 minutes, but the House must care about workers' welfare. He described gig workers for platforms like Zomato, Swiggy, Blinkit, Zepto, Ola, and Uber as the "invisible wheels of the Indian economy." Everyday, users get notifications about orders and rides, but behind these alerts are people often ignored. Chadha pointed out that while these companies have become billion-dollar unicorns, gig workers suffer worse conditions than daily wage labourers. He highlighted three major challenges: pressure to deliver fast, customer harassment, and dangerous working environments. He explained that 10-minute deliveries force workers to speed and even jump red lights. Workers fear losing ratings, incentives, or getting blocked. Delays of 5-7 minutes lead to scolding, threats, and one-star ratings, affecting monthly earnings. Chadha added that gig workers work 12-14 hours daily in all weather, with no protective gear, bonuses, or hazard pay. Unlike factory workers, they do not have permanent jobs, humane conditions, or health insurance. He called for urgent action to end this inhuman practice.